Project: 3.1

Developing a threatened species index

This project will develop and evaluate a set of indices that can provide reliable and robust measures of population trends across Australia’s threatened
species. This will support more coherent and transparent reporting of changes in biodiversity across national, state and regional levels.

Why is the research needed?

Threatened species conservation frequently involves monitoring individual species or ecosystems. However, to date little has been done to facilitate monitoring
and reporting at a national level on overall trends for threatened species or key groups, such as birds.

In addition, Australia lacks the capacity to holistically report on the broad status of biodiversity in Australia, as is routinely done for the economy.

The current absence of national reporting on trends in Australia’s threatened species and ecological communities has major policy and management consequences.

For example:

Difficulty or inability to report on international conservation targets, e.g. Aichi Target 12

Difficulty reporting at a high level on the benefits of conservation investments and policy

Difficulty robustly identifying the highest priority areas, species and threats at a national level

Reporting is more likely to be fragmented (e.g. state-based) and incoherent

There are no robust indicators of biodiversity conservation that can be used to complement existing national indicators of economic and social parameters
of our society, e.g. stock market indices, gross domestic product, or unemployment rate

Image: Painted Honeyeater. Photo: Andrew Silcocks, BirdLife Australia

How will the research help?

The project will, for the first time in Australia, develop an index that can provide reliable and robust measures of trends across Australia’s threatened
species, and allow for interrogation. Interrogation would allow comparison of trends: between different taxonomic groups; between species affected by the
same threatening process; or in relation to management investment and intervention type. The development and application of such indices will allow for
Australian governments to report internationally on biodiversity trends, measure robustly the success of headline strategies and refine those strategies
accordingly, measure return on biodiversity conservation investment, and more closely track and rapidly respond to priorities for threatened species management.

The project outputs will include development of:

A wide range of options for reporting and communicating high level information on the status and trends of Australia’s threatened species, including
web-based visualisation tools

A comprehensive national biodiversity database, (held by a single data host) which will allow for the integration of the index in perpetuity. This
requires the assembly and standardisation of disparate data from multiple sources

Where suitable data exists, the project will incorporate trend information for all EPBC Act listed threatened species (and near threatened where possible),
including all species listed as priorities under the Threatened Species Strategy.

The Threatened Species Index will enable Australian governments to:

Report internally and internationally on obligations relating to biodiversity

Conduct policy evaluation

Measure return on conservation investment

Readily provide information to, and engage the public in, threatened species recovery

Undertake enhanced assessment of threatened species’ status, such as up listing or down listing

Prioritise management and investment needs and provide a robust evidence based foundation for future allocations

Build and reinforce partnerships across many stakeholder groups that measure or respond to population trends for threatened species

What research activities are being undertaken?

The research activities required for the development of an integrated threatened species index are:

identifying data custodians,

developing protocols for sensitive species data handling,

negotiating data sharing,

vetting and pre-processing collected data,

assessing suitability of data for trend analyses,

aggregating data into spatial units used in analyses,

producing the index using the Living Planet Index approach, and

eliciting expert opinion on produced indices.

Once completed, this index can be readily interrogated to report on trends for different regions, jurisdictions and management investments.

Who is involved?

The Threatened Species Index involves a close collaboration with BirdLife Australia to deliver a ‘proof-of-concept’
for birds – thereby demonstrating that it is feasible and worthwhile to collate and analyse population trend information for a group of Australian threatened
species.

In addition, we are collaborating with Australian Government's Department of the Environment and Energy, including Parks Australia, representatives
from all states and territories, as well as the Australian Wildlife Conservancy and a number of universities. These all have committed to in-kind support
and the facilitation of data exchange on threatened species. The Atlas of Living Australia and Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) are engaged
for data curation and the development of a scientific workflow for index calculation.

Internationally, we are collaborating with the Zoological Society of London.

Full list of our partners:

When is the research happening?

The project commenced at the start of 2016 and will initially run for three years but with the potential to be extended until the end of 2020. A workshop
held in March 2016 brought together stakeholders and collaborators from all Australian states and territories. A workshop in March 2017 developed and trialled
the Living Planet Index developed by the Zoological Society of London and WWF as a potential method to calculate a threatened species index for birds.
Further workshops will be held to progress indices for plants, mammals, and freshwater species.

More Information

For more information or to receive updates on the progress of the project please contact :
Elisa Bayraktarov – e.bayraktarov@uq.edu.au

Factsheets about the index and its findings are available nationally and for states and territories.